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Tomas Berglund gave him hope.

Payne and Jones had saved many scientists at the laboratory in Rakovnik, but they had failed to deliver the two things they had promised Masseri: Tomas Berglund and Hendrik Cole.

With nothing to trade for Sahlberg and no idea where to look for Cole, they were forced to strike a new deal with Masseri. They knew they couldn’t put their trust in him entirely — after all, he had double-crossed Cole — but so far he hadn’t led them astray.

He had told them where to find the lab.

He had told them where to find Berglund.

And he had told them where to find Cole.

They hoped Masseri could help them again, which was why they reluctantly agreed to meet him in Prague. The same café as before. This time, the three of them together as the nightly festivities of the Old Town Square carried on around them.

Payne realized this would be a renegotiation, so he did his best to establish his position as one of strength. ‘It looks like you’ve lost your leverage.’

Masseri scoffed. ‘How do you figure that? I still have Dr Sahlberg.’

‘True, but how do you plan to collect? Cole’s not an idiot. He knows exactly how we found him in Rakovnik. If you try to deliver Mattias, he’ll cut you from ear to ear.’

Masseri smiled. ‘In that case, Sahlberg is no use to me. I guess I’ll leave him to rot.’

‘He’s of plenty use to you,’ Payne insisted. ‘He’s the only thing keeping me from leaping across this table and crushing your windpipe. I want him back.’

Masseri smiled. ‘I want double what Berglund was offering. In exchange, I will tell you where I have hidden Sahlberg.’

Payne shook his head. ‘Not a chance. I’m not altering our previous deal. I retrieve Tomas Berglund, and you hand over Mattias.’

‘How do I benefit from that?’ Masseri asked.

‘We’re still going to kill Hendrik Cole.’

All things considered, Masseri knew it was his best option. He couldn’t turn Sahlberg over to Cole. Not now. Not after his double-cross. Cole would kill him on sight. And if he couldn’t strong-arm Payne into paying for Sahlberg — and it certainly looked like Payne had no intention of paying a ransom — then at least Cole’s death would keep him from looking over his shoulder for the rest of his life.

His only other option was to kill Sahlberg, dump his body in the river, and disappear for as long as possible. But as he looked into Payne’s eyes, he knew the MANIAC would stop at nothing to avenge the loss of his friend. Killing Sahlberg would be a death sentence.

‘What do you need from me?’ Masseri conceded.

Jones answered. ‘We need a location. Where would Cole take Berglund for safe keeping?’

‘He doesn’t want to keep him safe. He wants to trade him for cash as quickly as possible. And guess who benefits the most from Dr Berglund’s continued existence?’

‘Harrison Zidane,’ Payne answered.

‘Exactly,’ Masseri said with a smile. ‘If Cole grabbed Berglund, it’s safe to assume that he has every intention of getting the most value for him. And it’s rather obvious Zidane has the deepest pockets and the most motivation.’

‘You think he’s taking him directly to Zidane?’

‘That’s what I would do,’ Masseri said. He leaned forward to make his point. ‘Harrison Zidane is in no condition to stray far from home. Until the hospital he is financing in Como is completed, he needs to remain in close proximity to the laboratory you destroyed or to his villa on the lake. He went to the lab for treatments, but Berglund went to him for checkups.’

Jones considered their options. ‘I’m guessing you’ve seen his place in Como. What kind of security are we talking about?’

‘Zidane keeps his own security force on hand at all times. Ex-Mossad, British SAS, former special forces, and so on. And that’s just to guard his artwork. There’s no telling what changes he’ll make once he hears about Rakovnik. And this time, you won’t have the element of surprise. He and his men will be waiting for your arrival.’

If Cole headed directly to Italy, there was no way for Payne, Jones or Dial to beat him to Lake Como. He simply had too much of a head start. Fortunately, Dial didn’t need to be in Italy to mobilize his troops. He managed that with a phone call.

Though they had no power to make arrests, there was nothing in the Interpol charter that prevented them from observing suspects. At Dial’s insistence, NCB agents from the Milan office were patrolling the waters of Lake Como before the sun came up. And their timing couldn’t have been better. Had they waited even fifteen minutes longer to follow Dial’s order, they would have missed the small powerboat as it slipped into Zidane’s private dock at dawn.

The agents watched as three men stealthily made their way from the water to the house. The first was the driver of the boat. The second was Tomas Berglund. The third — the injured man pushing Berglund as he stumbled up the steps to the villa — was Hendrik Cole. They were greeted by a throng of security personnel, each carrying the kind of firepower seldom seen on men protecting exclusive waterfront estates.

‘They’ve arrived in Lake Como,’ Dial told Payne and Jones as he disconnected the call from the Milan office. ‘They’re at Harrison Zidane’s house. And your informant was right about the guards. The property is protected by at least ten heavily armed men.’

‘I’d prefer heavy men with no arms,’ Jones cracked.

‘Me too,’ Payne admitted.

Dial frowned. ‘Guys, I’m worried about your safety here. If you approach from the front, the guards can take you out long before you reach the shore. Not to mention anyone who happens to be in the water at the time.’

‘Who said anything about the front?’ Jones asked as he pulled out his tablet computer and showed Dial several images of the back half of Zidane’s property. It consisted of a sheer rock face that extended several hundred feet in the air and protected the villa like a castle wall.

Dial looked at him like he was crazy. ‘You can’t be serious.’

Jones deadpanned. ‘I’m always serious.’

62

Saturday, 27 July

Zidane’s villa on Lake Como abutted the steep slopes of the Italian Alps. Cut into the rock, the house perched magnificently above the water’s edge. The location offered stunning views of the lake. It also made the estate inaccessible from the rear.

At least for most people.

Thanks to satellite images from Randy Raskin, Payne and Jones realized that the security detail at Zidane’s house was focused on the lakefront. The guards kept a watchful eye on the water, but they left the back of the property — the sheer cliffs of the mountain — virtually unattended.

Jones decided this was the best way in.

Plus, it would be a hell of a ride.

Payne stood at the edge of the Boeing C-17’s cargo ramp and peered out into the night sky. Had it been a few hours later, he would have been able to see the curvature of the earth from this height.

‘You remember how to do this?’ he teased.

‘Like riding a bike,’ Jones replied.

‘Since when do you ride a bike at thirty thousand feet?’

‘Okay, it’s nothing like riding a bike,’ Jones admitted. ‘It’s a hell of a lot longer fall to the pavement.’

While on active duty, they had often used HALO jumps — High Altitude Low Opening — to infiltrate hostile territory. This dangerous maneuver allowed them to deploy from more than five miles above the lake — far too high for either them or their aircraft to be noticed by guards on the ground. They would freefall to the top of the mountain peaks before opening their chutes at the very last minute.